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Agriculture Test

Agriculture Test. Blake Peterson and Emma Richardson. Canadian Thistle. -is a chemical process that converts carbon dioxide into organic compounds, especially sugars, using the energy from sunlight. Photosynthesis. Barley. African Violet. Saintpaulia species . Transpiration.

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Agriculture Test

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  1. Agriculture Test Blake Peterson and Emma Richardson

  2. Canadian Thistle

  3. -is a chemical process that converts carbon dioxide into organic compounds, especially sugars, using the energy from sunlight Photosynthesis

  4. Barley

  5. African Violet Saintpaulia species

  6. Transpiration It is a part of the water cycle, and it is the loss of water vapor from parts of plants (similar to sweating), especially in leaves but also in stems, flowers and roots.

  7. Snake Plant Sansevieriatrifasciata

  8. Respiration • Opposite of photosynthesis. Breaths in sugars and oxygen, then releases carbon dioxide and water.

  9. Oats

  10. English Ivy Hedera helix

  11. Dandilion

  12. Peace Lily Spathiphyllum species

  13. Rubber Plant Ficuselastica

  14. Wheat

  15. Heartleaf Phildendron Philodendron scandensoxycardium

  16. Aluminum Plant Pileacardierei

  17. Corn

  18. Rex Begonia Begonia rex

  19. Spider Plant Chlorophytumcommosum

  20. Rye

  21. Wandering Jew Zebrinapendula

  22. African Violet Saintpaulia species

  23. Lambsquarter

  24. Cocklebur

  25. Quackgrass

  26. Ragweed

  27. Green Foxtail

  28. Velvet Leaf

  29. Fibrous Root A root system made up of many threadlike members of more or less equal length, as in most grasses.

  30. Wild mustard

  31. Tap Root A primary root that grows vertically downward and gives off small lateral roots.

  32. Sorghum

  33. Stems The main ascending axis of a plant; a stalk or trunk.

  34. Jimsonweed

  35. Complete Flower A flower having all four floral parts: sepals, petals, stamens, and carpels.

  36. Cambium A lateral meristem in vascular plants, including the vascular cambium and cork cambium, that forms parallel rows of cells resulting in secondary tissues.

  37. Xylem The supporting and water-conducting tissue of vascular plants, consisting primarily of tracheids and vessels; woody tissue.

  38. Phloem The food-conducting tissue of vascular plants, consisting of sieve tubes, fibers, parenchyma, and sclereids. Also called bast.

  39. Incomplete Flower A flower lacking sepals, petals, stamens, or pistils.

  40. Ovary A part of the female reproductive organ of the flower.

  41. Stigma The receptive apex of the pistil of a flower, on which pollen is deposited at pollination.

  42. Ovule A minute structure in seed plants, containing the embryo sac and surrounded by the nucellus, that develops into a seed after fertilization.

  43. Style The usually slender part of a pistil, situated between the ovary and the stigma.

  44. Pistil The female, ovule-bearing organ of a flower, including the stigma, style, and ovary.

  45. Stamen The pollen-producing reproductive organ of a flower, usually consisting of a filament and an anther.

  46. Anther The pollen-bearing part of the stamen.

  47. Filament The stalk that bears the anther in a stamen.

  48. Embryo The minute, rudimentary plant contained within a seed or an archegonium.

  49. Seed A ripened plant ovule containing an embryo.

  50. Endosperm The nutritive tissue within seeds of flowering plants, surrounding and absorbed by the embryo.

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